1 / 36

Dr. Moneen Jones Research Entomologist Delta Research Center Portageville, MO 63873

Rice Insect Management 2014 or What’s what, What’s where, and Does that insecticide really work or did you just waste your time and money?. Dr. Moneen Jones Research Entomologist Delta Research Center Portageville, MO 63873. Rice Production:. Rice Water Weevil Grape colaspis.

ailsa
Télécharger la présentation

Dr. Moneen Jones Research Entomologist Delta Research Center Portageville, MO 63873

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Rice Insect Management 2014orWhat’s what, What’s where, and Does that insecticide really work or did you just waste your time and money? Dr. Moneen Jones Research Entomologist Delta Research Center Portageville, MO 63873

  2. Rice Production: • Rice Water Weevil • Grape colaspis • Rice Water Weevil • Grape colaspis • Rice Water Weevil • Grape colaspis • 3.0 million acres (2009) • Arkansas -1.425 M • Louisiana – 415,000 • Texas – 168,000 • Mississippi – 240,000 • Missouri – 194,000 • Rice Water Weevil • Grape colaspis * 2009 USDA

  3. Rice Insect Pests • Many insects inhabit rice fields, but only a few are considered to be pest species • Missouri is lucky – insect problems are less severe than in other rice producing areas of the US • Most common pest – rice water weevil • Others – rice stink bug, grasshoppers • Rare – armyworms, chinch bugs

  4. Insect Pests During the Vegetative Growth Stages(seedling to tillering) • Rice Seed Midge • Grape Colaspis • Chinch Bugs • Rice Water Weevil • Armyworms

  5. Why Seed Treatments in Rice? • Effective treatments for control of grape colaspis and RWW • Effective, economical way to control GC and RWW • Value beyond insect control?

  6. Grape Colaspis • Small, yellow-brown beetle • Both the adult and larval (1/4-inch in length, off-white) stages feed on rice, but the larval damage to seedling shoots is the biggest concern. • Rice is most vulnerable to this insect when rice is rotated after lespedeza or soybean. • After the female beetle lays her eggs in the soil near alternate host plants, the larvae hatch and feed on nearby roots. • This insect overwinters as a larva in the soil. • Damage: seedling root and shoot damage

  7. Grape Colaspis

  8. Rice Water Weevil • An adult rice water weevil is small (1/8-inch in length) and gray. • Overwinter in clumps of perennial grasses, leaf litter, etc. adjacent to rice fields. • Once the low temperature exceeds 65 degrees F for three consecutive nights during the spring, adults take flight to feed, mate, and locate egg-laying sites. • Egg laying starts once a permanent flood is established (drilled-seeded) or when rice plants emerge above the water surface (water-seeded). Prefer young grass plants (< 2 wks old) • After hatching the larvae feed for 3 – 4 wksbefore pupating. • Next generation emerges with 5 – 6 wks. • Usually one generation per year in Missouri • Adult foliar damage produces translucent, longitudinal scars, but this damage is not of economic importance. • The progeny of the overwintering generation causes the most damage because the root systems of smaller rice plants may not compensate for the larval root damage • Can lead to lower yields. • Weeds have less competition because of reduced root growth. • Damage: longitudinal scars on leaf, root pruning

  9. Rice Water Weevil • Severity of Infestations: • Type of cropping system (drilled-seeded versus water-seeded) • Length of time in rice production • Intensity of previous year infestation • Length of time in rice production • Availability and proximity of overwintering sites • Stand density • Environmental conditions

  10. Rice Water Weevil • The other control option for rice water weevils is to apply an insecticide. Before you elect to use an insecticide, you must first decide between an at-planting application or an in-season, rescue treatment. Formerly, carbofuran (Furadan 3G) was the standard material and was applied based on larval core counts. Now the options include seed treatments with chlorantraniliprole (Dermacor X-100 at 1.5 – 6.0 oz/100 lb seed), clothianidin (NipSit Inside 5 FS at 1.92 oz/100 lb seed) or thiamethoxam (Cruiser 5 FS at 0.03 mg ai/seed; 3.3 oz/10 lb seed) targeted at the larval stage, diflubenzuron (Dimilin 2L at 12-16 fl. oz. / acre) for the egg stage, and a pyrethroid insecticide (Table 5) to control the adult stage. • Each labeled insecticide has its own advantages and disadvantages in terms of controlling this pest as well as others. Because of seed treatments, application costs are eliminated when the rice is planted. In drilled-seeded rice with chronic rice water weevil infestations or in water-seeded rice fields, Cruiser, Dermacor, Dimilin, and NipSit provide good residual control of the weevils. Disadvantages associated with using seed treatments include: unknown extent of rice water weevil infestations before planting, and additional equipment and costs associated with treating the seed. • A foliar insecticide application may be preferable when rice fields are infrequently infested with the rice water weevil. A disadvantage with foliar applications is that timing these applications is absolutely crucial. Once the permanent flood is established and female weevils submerge to lay their eggs, these foliar treatments may no longer provide effective control of the adults. Apply Karate Z, Prolex, Proaxis, Declare, and Mustang Max within 7d after permanent flood. A second application may be necessary 5 – 7d later. Only Dimilin is recommended to control the egg stage. The University of Arkansas adult leaf scar sampling method (Table 4) is useful to determine when the severity of weevil infestations warrants a foliar insecticide application. Preliminary field research suggests that foliar insecticide applications are most effective when applied 7 to 10 days after permanent flood in drilled-seeded rice. Timing is even more crucial with water-seeded rice. In Arkansas, the recommended application timing is when approximately 50% of the plants are just above the water surface; whereas, in Louisiana, the recommended application timing is when adults, leaf damage, and favorable egg-laying conditions (water in the field) are present.

  11. Recommended Rice Water Weevil chemicals, rates, and misc. management

  12. RWW Adult Scarring

  13. Prairie County, (Price Bros. Farm) Seeding Rate Trial Dermacor 0.025 (90 lbs/a) UTC (90 lbs/a) UTC (120lbs/a) Dermacor0.125 (120s lbs/a) Cruiser 0.03 (120 lbs/a)

  14. St. Francis County Rice Seed Treatment 2 (Pinetree Exp. Station) 2010 UTC Dermacor 0.025

  15. St. Francis County, Rice Seed Treatment 2 (Pinetree Exp. Station) Nipsit Inside (125) UTC

  16. Moery Farm, Lonoke Co. Untreated Dermacor

  17. Dermacor – R2 = 0.3868 CruiserMaxx – R2 = 0.727 Untreated – R2 = 0.7451

  18. Roundup 4 oz/A 20 DAT Treated Untreated

  19. Insecticide ST Roundup at 4 oz/A Fungicide ST only Roundup at 4 oz/A

  20. Insecticide ST Newpath at 0.5 oz/A Fungicide ST only Newpath at 0.5 oz/A

  21. Insecticide ST Newpath at 1 oz/A Fungicide ST only No drift herbicide

  22. CONSIDER SEED TREATMENTS • HIGH VALUE SEED – LOW SEEDING RATES • LESS THAN OPTIMUM CONDITIONS • March/ April Planting : No Till : Marginal Seed Quality • KNOWN PROBLEM FIELDS • VARIETIES WITH POOR VIGOR • BURNDOWN TIMING • FIELD YIELD POTENTIAL • PRODUCER’S ATTITUDE ON INPUTS • Try to choose the seed treatment you want…not what the seed company wants • Don’t take anybodies word for what a seed treatment will do for you….try it yourself, they cost too much • Beware of lower end use rates …. usually aren’t as good as upper end rates, you get what you pay for and you will pay for what you get

  23. Insect Pests During the Reproductive Growth Stages (panicle initiation to harvest) • Rice Stalk Borer • Grasshoppers • Rice Stink Bug

  24. Rice Stink Bug

  25. Rice Stink Bug • Biology • Adults are approximately 3/8-inch in length • Shield-shaped with a sharp spine at the widest point on their bodies • Straw-brown to a bright yellow underneath • Adults overwinter near food sources within leaf debris. • After mating, females lay their green, barrel-shaped eggs in masses on leaf blades. • The nymphs hatch within five days and mature to adults within 18 days. • Prefers to feed on barnyardgrass or any other grass species. • Populations usually increase in grassy field margins before movement into nearby rice fields. • Avoid mowing these field margins once rice enters the heading stage. • Both the adult and nymph stages can cause economic damage when they feed on developing rice kernels. Yield reductions are rare, but kernel quality can be affected in some years.

  26. Rice Stink Bug • Threshold: An insecticide application is recommended when >5 stink bugs / 10 sweeps are collected during the first two weeks after 75% panicle emergence. For the remainder of the year, the threshold doubles to >10 stink bugs / 10 sweeps. • Damage: "pecky" rice

  27. Rice Stink Bugs • Must scout on a regular basis (weekly) • Evaluate control 4-5 days post application • 2 apps may be required if populations are high • Avoid stink bugs as possible- don’t be first and don’t be last • Growers and consultants doing a great job • Need to be prepared to do the same in 2014

  28. Thanks to: • April Forrester • Tayler McLane • Gus Lorenz (efficacy slides)

  29. Any Questions? Contact: Dr. Moneen Jones (Dr. Mo) 573-379-5431 (Work) 573-391-4042 (Cell) jonesmon@Missouri.edu (e-mail) http://bootheelagpestmanagement.wordpress.com/ (blog) https://twitter.com/bootheelbuglady (twitter)

More Related